On October 1, 2015, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced that for the first year of the three year risk corridors program, qualified health plan (QHP) issuers will pay charges of approximately $362 million, and QHP issuers have requested $2.87 billion of 2014 payments, based on current data for the 2014 benefit year. 1 Consistent with prior guidance, assuming full collections of risk corridors charges for the 2014 benefit year, insurers will be paid an amount that reflects a proration rate of 12.6% of their 2014 benefit year risk corridors payment requests.2 The remaining 2014 risk corridors payments will be made from 2015 risk corridors collections, and if necessary, 2016 collections.

In the event of a shortfall for the 2016 program year, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) will explore other sources of funding for risk corridors payments, subject to the availability of appropriations. This includes working with Congress on the necessary funding for outstanding risk corridors payments.

HHS recognizes that the Affordable Care Act requires the Secretary to make full payments to issuers, and HHS is recording those amounts that remain unpaid following our 12.6% payment this winter as fiscal year 2015 obligation of the United States Government for which full payment is required.

OK, I lied; I do have one comment to make here.

CMS is doling out just 12.5% of the monies owed to various carriers for the Risk Corridor program, and is promising that the remaining 87.5% will be paid over the next two years.

Now, for some firms (mostly the larger ones), these "delayed" payments aren't that big of a deal; in some cases they may only have lost a relatively small amount; in others, they may be large/profitable enough in other areas (or have large enough cash reserves) that they can afford to bide their time for the remaining funds.

For other, mostly smaller carriers, however, having that other 87.5% "delayed" amounts to a death sentence; while this mostly means the 11 Co-Ops which are being disbanded as I type this (one of them already went belly-up last year, well before the Risk Corridor mess), there's also at least one private carrier (WINhealth in Wyoming) which is folding as a result, and of course other insurers are killing certain plan offerings, pulling out of certain states and so on as they reposition themselves to cope with the RC losses.

CMS is doling out the 12.5% evenly to every carrier which is owed money, regardless of how much or little they're owed, or how desperate their situation is, right? So here's my qeustion: Are they legally required to make the payments this way, or could they use their discretion to prioritize certain carriers over others if they wanted to?

In other words, let's say that a Blue Cross is owed $100 million (and is paid $12.5 million) while a Little Guy is owed $10 million (and is paid $1.25 million).

However, Blue Cross has a couple billion in the bank already while being profitable in their Large Group market and can thus easily wait for the other $87.5 million...whereas Little Guy only has a few million in the bank and relies mainly on the individual market for their business. Does CMS have the legal discretion to pay Little Guy, say, 50% of what they're owed ($5 million) while only paying Blue Cross 8.75% of their funds ($8.75 million)? The total paid out would still be the same ($13.75 million), and the $3.75 million difference wouldn't make a damned bit of difference to a behemoth like Blue Cross, but could easily be the difference between survival and liquidation to Little Guy.